General

Wrongly Accused Black Men, Get a Pardon After 70 Years

NewsGram Desk

Four black men who were wrongly accused of raping a 17-year-old white girl in the southern U.S. state of Florida 70 years ago, received pardons Friday.

Charles Greenlee, Walter Irvin, Samuel Shepherd and Ernest Thomas became known as the Groveland Four.

All of them are dead.

Members of their families, however, are still alive.

The families attended the clemency hearing in Tallahassee Friday where officials voted unanimously to pardon the four men.

"It is never too late to do the right thing," Governor Ron DeSantis said in a statement. "I believe the rule of law is society's sacred bond. When it is trampled, we all suffer. For the Groveland Four, the truth was buried."

The dome of the U.S. Capitol is seen beyond a chain fence during the partial government shutdown in Washington, Jan. 8, 2019. VOA

Thomas was killed by a mob shortly after the incident in 1949.

The other three were tortured into confessions and convicted by all-white juries.

Shepherd was shot and killed by a sheriff who was transporting him to a re-trial.

Greenlee and Irvin received life sentences.

Norma Padgett, the alleged rape victim, is still alive. She also attended the hearing Friday.

"I am not no liar," she told the hearing.

Independent investigators have proved the men who were convicted without any evidence, during the notorious Jim Crow-era in the U.S., were innocent of the charge.

Devil In The Grove, a book about the Groveland Four case, won a Pulitzer Prize in 2013. (VOA

Chinese social media reels over woman's illegal surrogacy case

New global carbon trade rules adopted at UN climate summit expand inclusion, draw ire

More logging is proposed to help curb wildfires in the US Pacific Northwest

Bangladesh will seek extradition of ex-premier Sheikh Hasina from India

Diabetes drug shows promise in protecting kidneys